The internet is a huge place and with its spread, jurisdiction is often a very difficult and ambiguous tasks. Generally, it is believed that a country has jurisdiction if the server is located in the country or the person(s) concerned stays in the country. Well, there is a new twist now.

Take the case of 23 year old Richard O'Dwyer. He lives in the UK and is a citizen of the UK. He is also the owner of a website called TVShack.net, a website which streams TV shows and movies without proper license. Yes it is illegal no doubt and generally it will be dealt with by the British authorities or the country where the website is hosted.

But the United States' Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency (ICE) thinks otherwise. The ICE wants to extradite O'Dwyer to the US and try him there. Yes, the fact that he is a British citizen and his website was not even hosted in the US does not matter to the ICE. To the ICE all that matters is that he owns a website with a .net TLD. So, he is liable for persecution in the US.

According to the ICE, they have jurisdiction over any website which has a .com and .net TLD. The DNS index for these websites are routed through Verisign, a company based in Virginia USA. According to the ICE, that naturally gives them jurisdiction over all the .com and .net websites.

If a website breaks some US law, the ICE wants to try the owner according to the US laws. To them, it does not matter if a website is hosted in the US or not, it does not even matter even if what the website owner is doing is legal in his country.

By definition, almost all copyright infringement and trademark violation is transnational. There's very little purely domestic intellectual property theft.

Without wishing to get into the particulars of any case, the general goal of law enforcement is to arrest and prosecute individuals who are committing crimes. That is our goal, our mission. The idea is to try to prosecute.

This move by the ICE sets a very bad precedent for net neutrality and freedom. If a foreign country I have never been to can try me for something which is illegal there but not in my country, it undermines the freedom of my country. It is ridiculous that the ICE even believe that everyone should follow their copyright laws.

A case somewhat similar, happened a while back. The ICE seized the domain of a Spanish website because it violates US copyright law. The website had been declared legal by Spanish courts twice in the past and its server is not even hosted in the US. That did not stop the ICE from applying US laws to a Spanish website. The website is now suing the ICE.